I had to take a few weeks off to help my husband and now ugh, where do I start again? How do I go back to my MS? I re-read it and still can't find the juice to finish. I still have 4 chapters in the middle to write and the end to clean up. All together, about 15K words.

But where? How? I don't feel like I have anything left... HELP!!!

(thanks, I missed you guys)

Robin"A glass slipper is only a shoe. Dreamers who only dream never have their dreams come true."

Many pros do a "run-up." I.e., start the next draft, revise everything in the direction of good (even if at first all you can do is recast sentences and dump obvious digressions). You need to do that work anyway, and by the time you're at the end of revising, you'll know what goes in the holes.

Welcome back! I completely understand the needing to take time out to help others and it is most refreshing to re-enter the forumosphere. That was pretty much my life last year. I hope it was a productive time for you both.

Re your question, do you perhaps have a favorite part of the plot that might reenergize you if you revisit it? Or good people around you to discuss your next steps with? Sometimes I find even just thinking outloud helps.

And, of course, accompanying all these suggestions are huge slabs of chocolate!

Good luck picking up the energy thread. I'm sure you will be back in the groove before you know it!

Robin,I have SO been where you are. It's a terrible feeling! I get amost panicky. Then when I sit down to write I cannot even force myself to think about it. But, I have found something that helps me (usually). I go somewhere, most often to a park or maybe a quiet drive in the car, and daydream about my work. I don't plan anything, I don't plot anything, I just think about the story I have so far, what it would be like to be one of the characters perhaps, or perhaps I'll just go over a favorite scene in my mind. Before long, I find myself beginning to plan and plot naturally. Things start coming to me on their own, and soon I can't wait to get home and write. This usually works. But sometimes I've had to do it a few times before my mind frees up enough to where my creative juices are flowing.

Hope that helps. Best of luck, and let us know how things turn out. :)

"Don't only practice your art, but force your way into its secrets, for it and knowledge can raise men to the divine." ~ Ludwig van Beethoven